EIGHTH WEEK FRIDAY: KICK UP THE HEELS OF OLD SHOES


OLD SHOES DANCE BEST

 

KICK UP YOUR HEELS AT  YESTERDAY’S NEWS

KICK UP YOUR TOES AT  BEHOLDEN VIEWS

KICK UP YOUR LOINS AT  A MISTAKEN MUSE

KICK UP YOUR ELBOWS AT  THE WRONG CRUISE

 

STOMP YOUR FEET IN A TWO-STEP OF YAHOO

SLAP YOUR KNEES IN A BANTER OF BALLYHOO

TAP YOUR FINGERS IN A SYNCO OF BOO-HOO

SNAP YOUR HEAD BACK IN A NOD TO YOUR NEW WOO-WOO

 

SHUFFLE FAST  TO THE RIGHT SIDE OF YOUR OWN SCORE

TWIST BACK INTO THE MIDDLE OF THAT GREAT WIDE FLOOR

WIGGLE AND WAGGLE THE OLD SPARE TIRE FOR MORE AND MORE

LIE FLAT  BREATHE FAT  MAKE LIKE A MAT  IN THE DISCOUNT STORE

 

KICKING AND TAPPING AND WIGGLING MAKE LYING DOWN

A TRUE BLESSING ONLY GAINED BY A CLOWN

KICKING UP THE HEELS OF OLD SHOES

INVITES ANOTHER JIG WITH THE NEW MUSE.

 

May you all get old enough to be young at heart!

 

THURSDAY: WISDOM BEFORE NEWS


I am trying something a little different today: at least composing the first draft of my post BEFORE reading any emails, twitters, online news or participating in any of my favorite blogs or forums.  I want to squeeze out of my fingertip pores a drop or two of my first-of-the morning impressions.  Then I will attempt to compare them to first-of-the-morning impressions I remember from the age of eight back on the farm, pretending that was on a Thursday morning, as well.

About-to-be 65 on this glorious October morning, peeking out the French door at first sunbeams striking the blazing leaves of the wild grapevines hanging above my mailbox, giving thanks for my bigger and better heating pad that prevents stiff joints in the morning, executing a few langorous stretches and pretend Tai Chi stances, I begin to allow my to-do list for today to invade my conciousness.  The annual trip to the vet for exam and vaccinations for my 3-year-old female Black Labrador Retriever has become something I approach with joy, as my Lab is really healthy and smart and our vet is just great (not to mention being wise enough to have graduated from my own alma mater!).  Then I get to complete and submit ads for the program of a local music festival in memory of a guy we all loved, whose life transformed so many lives in our community.  Also, I am remembering all the serendipitous encounters of my days over the past three-four weeks, no matter how rushed or how many deadlines(self-created or otherwise!) I was under.  So, okay, humming through a few more deep knee bends, toe-touchings, head-jogglings, I KNOW I am not bent under a single molecule of angst starting my day.

Now, about those early morning eye-openers back on the farm at the age of eight:  rolling over to gaze through my bedside window, I allow wake-up calls from the kitchen in another wing of the house to go unanswered for about 30 seconds.  I really NEED to absorb all the beauty outside first.  First things first, after all.  Then I leap up, crack my bedroom door, and holler a “Yes, Ma’am” down through the hall, across the “mudroom” to reach the vicinity of my mother at the stove.  I climb into last night’s outdoor chore clothes, scoot onto the mudroom, grab two pails of chicken feed and manage to avoid the worst droppings getting across the hen yard to their feeders.  Back to the kitchen, grab the waiting buckets of cat, dog, and horse food,  deliver feline and canine food in pans on the porch, scoot around the house,clump around and over piles of wet leaves under the live oaks in the front yard, back out the front yard gate, and putter along the tractor trail up to the feedlot/catchpen area of our biggest barn.  Stroke horsey nose, promise more attention after school, and start racing back to the house, not quite making it back inside the yard before legs turning to rubber, chest pain hits, and plop down on the front walk.  Mother has been watching from the kitchen windows of the sink.  As it turns out, my parents have been concerned and carefully observing my little “weak spells”.  She has been campaigning with my father to excuse me from before school chores until they can find out more about why I LOOK so healthy but keep having these “spells”.

Okay, segue way about 28-30 years ahead to when I am finally correctly diagnosed with a type of aggravated mitralvalve prolapse and develop the lifestyle/low-level treatment plan I still enjoy today.  Also, seque way to the years between 1999 and somewhere around 2006 when I finally stretched internally up above the heretofore lifetime angst I had suffered in the company of most other people, even when I was having a marvelous time with said folks.  The events of those two time periods in my personal growth are largely responsible for the first paragraph of this post being true of the Granbee of today!

Hey, I don’t need to write a second draft of this post.  I like it just the way it is.  After all, I will revisit all of the above no doubt many times in future posts here!  Love you guys!